Vice President Mike Pence occasionally ventures outside the nation’s capital for events that become embarrassing. It was around this time three years ago, for example, that Pence visited a NASA facility, approached equipment that was labeled “Do Not Touch,” and was photographed with his hand directly on it.
It was funny at the time. The vice president’s trip to Minnesota yesterday was far less amusing.
Vice President Mike Pence went on a tour of the Mayo Clinic’s coronavirus testing labs Tuesday — and ignored the prestigious Minnesota hospital’s rules that all occupants wear masks. “Mayo Clinic had informed @VP of the masking policy prior to his arrival today,” the clinic tweeted while Pence was still inside meeting with doctors and patients. The tweet was later deleted. Asked for comment, the clinic said only that it had “shared the masking policy with the VP’s office.”
If you’ve seen any of the coverage of Pence’s visit, you’ve probably experienced the one-of-these-things-is-not-like-the-other feeling. Physicians were wearing masks; patients were wearing masks; Mayo Clinic administrators were wearing masks; and FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn was wearing a mask.
This was, of course, how it should be. Guidelines to “stop the spread” of the coronavirus from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — guidelines that the vice president encourages Americans to follow — specifically recommend that people wear masks in public. It’s also the policy of the Mayo Clinic itself.
And yet, there was Pence, sans mask.
When this caused a stir, the vice president’s office issued a written statement explaining that Pence is tested regularly, which gives him confidence that he doesn’t have the coronavirus. The statement added, “I thought it’d be a good opportunity for me to be here, to be able to speak to these researchers, these incredible health care personnel, and look them in the eye and say thank you.”
Part of the problem is that the vice president probably can’t say with absolute certainty that he doesn’t have the coronavirus. It’s possible, for example, for a person to contract the virus after testing negative. It’s also possible for a test to produce a false negative. It’s why wearing a mask, especially around patients in a medical facility, is the responsible thing to do.
As the head of the official White House Coronavirus Task Force, Pence ought to know that.
The other part of the problem — and this is important — is that masks and blindfolds are not the same thing. Pence may have been eager to look health care professionals “in the eye” — the vice president has long placed great significance in his steely gaze — but masks don’t cover eyes.









